Monday, 3 April 2017

Luxembourg City site and situation

Many were simply too brief to provide an adequate description or explanation

Maps and images were often not referred to in text - and even when they were, there were usually obvious additional points (evidence!) to make

Map details, such as height and distance to establish steepness (with a pic of contour lines from the site!), would be very useful

Many of you barely explained how a defensive site actually functions!

Some didn't identify it primarily as a defensive site!

Trade links (and detail of what was traded, with whom!) is a key factor in the situation (see Ronan's mostly excellent analysis), along with the water, woods, other building/trade-able resources, suitability for farming, and those defensive features

Use of geographical terms was inconsistent - for example, the MEANDER feature is an important one!

PLAGIARISM - its not so much that some of you were trying to cheat (that won't matter as you get to GCSE, A-Level and beyond, which is why its a very important lesson), but its not clear enough where you got information from, and writing too often clearly was not in your own style or words. Here's an example - do you think a Y7 student is likely to write this? 'Luxembourg city is a
forested highland region which is incised by the deep valleys of a river
network organised around the river Sûre.'

SAMPLE QUOTESI would only use the shortest of these in an essay, but always state where you get information from, eg: the city was on a 'major miltary route' which linked what would become Germany and France (Wiki). Indenting quotes as I have below also helps to set them out very clearly.

The history of Luxembourg properly began with the construction of Luxembourg Castle in the High Middle Ages.... Around this fort, a town gradually developed, which became the centre of
a small but important state of great strategic value to France, Germany
and the Netherlands. Luxembourg's fortress, located on a rocky outcrop
known as the Bock, was steadily enlarged and strengthened over the years by successive owners. Some of these included the Bourbons, Habsburgs and Hohenzollerns, who made it one of the strongest fortresses on the European continent, the Fortress of Luxembourg. (from Wiki)

The ancient Saxon name of its capital city, Lucilinburhuc (“Little Fortress”), symbolized its strategic position as “the Gibraltar of the north,” astride a major military route linking Germanic and Frankish territories. (from Britannica)

The nation's links with Germanic culture strengthened
during the five centuries of independence, especially in the fourteenth
century, when Luxembourg's dukes also ruled the German-centered
Holy Roman Empire and the national territory extended as far east as the
present-day Czech Republic. (from everyculture.com)

WHAT EXCELLENT LOOKS LIKE
This is what an outstanding report looks like (by Georgia and Siddarth), with another (by Ronan) which is very good on explaining the situation, focussing on the trade links:LAURINE's